CEO Edgar
Figueroa noted, however, that his organization "just started to evaluate all
the possibilities for adding a 60GHz specification" and that the alliance's 60GHz
task group might also evaluate other
60GHz technologies as well. There is a "significant list of 60GHz alternatives"
for the alliance to consider, he said.

,
the sole supplier of chips for the competing Wireless HD technology, said it
will make a dual-technology
WirelessHD/WiGig reference design kit available to CE suppliers in June. WirelessHD
using SiBeam chips is already used in select HDTVs.

, the WiFi Alliance will be able to evaluate WiGig's 60GHz-band in-room
wireless technology, which is designed for use in high-definition TVs, PCs, PC
peripherals, laptops and battery-operated handheld devices such as cellphones,
portable media players (PMPs), and digital camcorders.

Non-battery-operated WiGig products would be able to communicate
at up to 6Gbps, enough to stream one uncompressed 1080p 60Hz video program from
a settop box or Blu-ray player at one end of a room to a flat-panel HDTV
display at the other end. The technology is also power-efficient for use in
battery-operated handheld devices, enabling speedy file transfers of at least
1GB at short range, the WiGig Alliance has said.

also defines procedures that enable WiGig devices to hand over
sessions to the 2.4 and 5GHz bands in which current WiFi-certified 802.11a/b/g/n
devices operate.

Current WiFi-certified devices are designed for multiroom home
networks and peer-to-peer applications but at much slower speeds. For WiFi-certified
802.11n products, for example, the spec's theoretical data rate is 600Mbps.
Products certified under the 802.11b/g/a standards are slower than that.

"Some or all elements [of
the WiGig] specification might find their way into our 60GHz WiFi program,"
Figueroa said. The WiFi Alliance "could pick and choose" elements of several
60GHz standards to incorporate in a single spec that would be certified by the
alliance, he added.

Under the program, he pointed out, the WiFi Alliance is not
developing its own 60GHz technology but is developing a certification program for
a 60GHz technology to ensure products equipped with the technology are able to
interoperate. "Our potential certification program would ensure the seamless
handoff [of WiFi-certified products from the 60GHz to the 2.4/5GHz bands]", he said.

For its part, SiBeam contended in a statement that WirelessHD
"will continue to provide the best solution for WVAN (wireless video area
networking]" but that WiGig "can potentially serve as a good platform for
support of data and WLAN applications."